It sparked a fire to change culture and religion. Everyone during this time was ready to move on from the European customs and find new ways to live. They used symbols such as the Liberty Bell and the flag that became used as icons of the revolutionary spirit. Not only did this culture change unite many people together, but it also made it to where people wanted to have more and more religious freedom. The revolutionists were seeking a place to be able to practice their religion without interference from the states. This commitment to religious freedom made the American Revolution stand out from other contemporary revolutions and underscored its radical nature. There are many different key factors that prove this. “In the case of pietism, it can be understood as comprising overlapping elements of Protestantism: New England Puritanism, revivalist evangelistic, produced by the Great Awakening, and the pietism of European immigrants who stressed inner workings of the Holy Spirit believer's life. Denominationally, pietists could be found among congregationalists, Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterian, Quakers and a host of pietistic German and Dutch
It sparked a fire to change culture and religion. Everyone during this time was ready to move on from the European customs and find new ways to live. They used symbols such as the Liberty Bell and the flag that became used as icons of the revolutionary spirit. Not only did this culture change unite many people together, but it also made it to where people wanted to have more and more religious freedom. The revolutionists were seeking a place to be able to practice their religion without interference from the states. This commitment to religious freedom made the American Revolution stand out from other contemporary revolutions and underscored its radical nature. There are many different key factors that prove this. “In the case of pietism, it can be understood as comprising overlapping elements of Protestantism: New England Puritanism, revivalist evangelistic, produced by the Great Awakening, and the pietism of European immigrants who stressed inner workings of the Holy Spirit believer's life. Denominationally, pietists could be found among congregationalists, Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterian, Quakers and a host of pietistic German and Dutch